Talk:Hybrid fibre-coaxial

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

[edit] Wishlist for this article

1. Diagram showing a typical HFC architecture
2. A typical frequency chart showing where services are located in the frequency band. For example, in North America, typically 50-550MHz is 79 Analog Channels and 550MHz+ is for digital TV, internet data, telephony and VOD. Maybe this better belongs in the article for Cable television
3. Examples and photos of actual optical nodes.

Unforgettable fan 16:24, 10 November 2006 (UTC)

[edit] Removing too american

I'm removing the "Too American or Canadian" tag from the article because there is no content here that explains that tradition. I'll modify a few sentences with "US and Canadian" to at least partially mitigate the concern, but if you're going to complain, you could at least complain in the right spot... User:kah13 15:54, 5 August 2007 (Pacific Daylight Time)

Some of the facts here would be true in NTSC-based countries, but would be false in countries that are based on PAL or SECAM. Channel 2 is centered around 55.25 MHz in NTSC-based countries, but it probably is diffrent in countries based on PAL or SECAM. I will try to globalize this best I can tonight when I have the energy to do so. Yesterday, I did not have the energy to fix this. Jesse Viviano 02:41, 6 August 2007 (UTC)
I have improved this to the best of my ability, but I doubt that a product data sheet for a residential cable amplifier would be accepted as a source, so I had to leave this off and mark this article as unreferenced. I might be able to source the forward and return path for NTSC-based countries, but I do not know where to source the PAL-based countries forward and return path. Jesse Viviano 03:26, 6 August 2007 (UTC)

[edit] Fibre?

Fiber. Fresheneesz (talk) 02:35, 29 November 2007 (UTC)